Monday, September 24, 2012

Neuroscience Researcher and Blogger to Share Research on Brain Function, Memory and Thought

CHESTERTOWN, MD— An educator and researcher in neuroscience
from Texas A & M University will visit Washington College on Tuesday,
October 2, to talk about the biology of thought and consciousness.

William
Klemm will deliver a power-point lecture titled “The Ghost Materializes: How
the Brain’s Three Minds Think,” based on his book by the same title.

The talk will take place at 5 p.m. in Hotchkiss Recital
Hall, Daniel Z. Gibson Center for the Arts on the Washington College campus,
300 Washington Avenue.A reception with
the author will follow in the Underwood Lobby.

Klemm’s lecture, like his latest book, crystallizes his
ideas about brain function, especially how the brain creates thought as either
latent messages stored as memory or “on-line” through patterns of nerve
impulses distributed in circuits and networks. He will challenge a common view
that free will is illusory with his theory for consciousness: that the brain is
capable of generating both automatic intentions and freely chosen ones. A
long-time sleep researcher, he also will present his latest theory for why
people dream.

Klemm, who calls himself “the Memory Medic,” has authored more
than 17 books, 50 book chapters and 200-peer-reviewed papers. His most recent
books include Better Grades, Less Effort, 2011 (Benecton), Atoms of Mind: The
Ghost Materializes, 2011 (Springer) and Memory Power 101, 2012
(Skyhorse/Norton).

He writes a monthly research-based newspaper column for baby
boomers that covers topics of memory, attentiveness and perception, and maintains
the blog site “Improve Your Learning and Memory.” He also blogs for Psychology
Today, whose editors have tagged many of his posts as “essential reads.” His
blog posts have drawn over a quarter million reader views.